Bush expresses doubt on CIA leak investigation\nWASHINGTON -- President Bush questioned whether investigators would be able to determine who leaked the identity of an undercover CIA officer Tuesday, but said his staff was cooperating. \nBush's chief of staff, Andrew Card, urged some 2,000 White House employees to turn over any relevant documents by Tuesday night. White House lawyers will screen the materials and decide which ones to send to the Justice Department as part of a criminal inquiry into the leak, Bush spokesman Scott McClellan said.\nMcClellan said it could take as long as two weeks to check those submissions for relevance.\nThe spokesman would not rule out the possibility that the White House would invoke executive privilege to shield sensitive documents from the Justice Department's inquiry. He said it was premature to talk about such a step.
Bear attacks and kills two tourists at Alaska campsite\nKING SALMON, Alaska -- A bear killed two tourists on a bear-watching trip in a remote section of Katmai National Park and Preserve. The identities of the victims, a man and woman from Malibu, Calif., were not immediately released.\nThe National Park Service said it was the first known time that a bear killed anyone in the 4.7-million-acre park, which is about 290 miles southwest of Anchorage.\nPark rangers killed two aggressive bears near where the bodies were found Monday. Bears have been attracted to the area by a late run of salmon, park service spokesman John Quinley said.\nAuthorities went to the campsite after an Andrew Airways pilot reported seeing a bear -- possibly on top of a body -- when he arrived to take the campers to Kodiak.\nDean Andrew, owner of Andrew Airways, said the man and woman had made the trip to take pictures of bears before. The company had been flying the man to Katmai for 13 years, he said.
Senator's wife abducted, set free\nWASHINGTON -- The wife of Rhode Island Sen. Judd Gregg was abducted at knifepoint Tuesday from the couple's suburban home and forced to withdraw money from a local bank, police said. She was released unharmed.\nKathleen Gregg, 52, said she found two men inside her McLean, Va., home when she arrived around 9:30 a.m. EDT. One pulled a knife and demanded money, said Jacqi Smith, a spokeswoman for the Fairfax County Police Department.\nMrs. Gregg was told to drive to a local Wachovia Bank branch and withdraw money, police said. After receiving the cash, the men fled in a silver Chevrolet Monte Carlo with Virginia license plates.\nPolice said there was no indication the robbers knew who Mrs. Gregg was.